Ignite Me: Chapter 65
Ignite Me (Shatter Me Book 3)
âWhat did you say to him?â I ask as soon as the elevator doors close.
Warner takes a deep breath. He says nothing.
âYouâre not going to tell me?â
âIâd rather not,â he says quietly.
I take his hand. Squeeze.
The elevator doors open.
âWill this be weird for you?â Warner asks. He looks surprised by his own question, as though he canât believe heâs even asking it.
âWill what be weird?â
âThat Kent and I are . . . brothers.â
âNo,â I say to him. âIâve known for a while now. It doesnât change anything for me.â
âThatâs good,â he says quietly.
Iâm nodding, confused.
Weâve moved into the bedroom. Weâre sitting on the bed now.
âYou wouldnât mind, then?â Warner asks.
Iâm still confused.
âIf he and I,â Warner says, âspent some time together?â
âWhat?â I ask, unable to hide my disbelief. âNo,â I say quickly. âNo, of course notâI think that would be amazing.â
Warnerâs eyes are on the wall.
âSo . . . you want to spend time with him?â Iâm trying so hard to give Warner space, and I donât want to pry, but I just canât help myself.
âI would like to know my own brother, yes.â
âAnd James?â I ask.
Warner laughs a little. âYes. And James.â
âSo youâre . . . happy about this?â
He doesnât answer right away. âI am not unhappy.â
I climb into his lap. Cup his face in my hands, tilting his chin up so I can see his eyes. Iâm smiling a stupid smile. âI think thatâs so wonderful,â I tell him.
âDo you?â He grins. âHow interesting.â
I nod. Over and over again. And I kiss him once, very softly.
Warner closes his eyes. Smiles slightly, his cheek dimpled on one side. He looks thoughtful now. âHow strange this has all become.â
I feel like I might die of happiness.
Warner picks me up off his lap, lays me back on the bed. Crawls over me, on top of me. âAnd why are you so thrilled?â he asks, trying not to laugh. âYouâre practically buoyant.â
âI want you to be happy,â I tell him, my eyes searching his. âI want you to have a family. I want you to be surrounded by people who care about you,â I say. âYou deserve that.â
âI have you,â he says, resting his forehead against mine. His eyes shut.
âYou should have more than me.â
âNo,â he whispers. He shakes his head. His nose grazes mine.
âYes.â
âWhat about you? And your parents?â he asks me. âDo you ever want to find them?â
âNo,â I say quietly. âThey were never parents to me. Besides, I have my friends.â
âAnd me,â he says.
âYou are my friend,â I tell him.
âBut not your best friend. Kenji is your best friend.â
I try so hard not to laugh at the jealousy in his voice. âYes, but youâre my favorite friend.â
Warner leans in, bypasses my lips. âGood,â he whispers, kissing my neck. âNow flip over,â he says. âOn your stomach.â
I stare at him.
âPlease,â he says. Smiles.
I do. Very slowly.
âWhat are you doing?â I whisper, turning to look at him.
He gentles my body back down.
âI want you to know,â he says, pulling on the zipper holding this suit together, âhow much I value your friendship.â The seam is coming apart and my skin is now open to the elements; I bite back a shiver.
The zipper stops at the base of my spine.
âBut Iâd like you to reconsider my title,â Warner says. He drops a soft kiss in the middle of my back. Runs his hands up my skin and pushes the sleeves off my shoulders, leaving kisses against my shoulder blades, the back of my neck. âBecause my friendship,â he whispers, âcomes with so many more benefits than Kenji could ever offer.â
I canât breathe. Canât.
âDonât you think?â Warner asks.
âYes,â I say too quickly. âYes.â
And then Iâm spinning, lost in sensations, and wondering how soon weâll be losing these moments, and wondering how long itâll be before weâll have them again.
I donât know where weâre going, he and I, but I know I want to get there. We are hours and minutes reaching for the same second, holding hands as we spin forward into new days and the promise of something better.
But though weâll know forward and weâve known backward, we will never know the present. This moment and the next one and even the one that wouldâve been right now are gone, already passed, and all weâre left with are these tired bodies, the only proof that weâve lived through time and survived it.
Itâll be worth it, though, in the end.
Fighting for a lifetime of this.